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I got an email yesterday from one of my flying friends.. the Bay Area
Aero Club's Cessna 172 was destroyed as a result of Hurricane Ike at its home base of Pearland Regional Airport, formerly named Clover Field. When I returned to flying in 2000, I joined the Aero Club.. it was then based at Houston Gulf Airport in League City, now the site of Tuscan Lakes.. One Niner Fox (short for its full call sign/tail number N1219F) was the workhorse plane in the club rental fleet. It was easy to fly, and for most was the step up aircraft for newly minted pilots. Its interior was worn, original 1980's interior, but it was on its 4th engine then.. Every 2200 engine hours (the equivalent of 100,000 car miles or so), the old engine would come out and either be overhauled to new limits or replaced outright.. It flew solid, and was forgiving for new pilots.. One Niner Fox was the plane I first flew my then wife as a newly minted private pilot to Carls Barbecue in Cy Fair (behind the restaurant is Weiser Airpark).. I'd been there once before as a student.. but I was high and fast, and had to abort the landing and come back around.. My wife wasn't new to flying - her brother was my first instructor, but I think she sensed I was uncomfortable and she put her hand on my shoulder.. She never admitted if she was the least bit scared.. One Niner Fox carried me and my Mother to Laredo on my first long-long cross country and my first time to fly my mother. We went over Bay City, The nuclear plant (wasn't a big deal then), Corpus, Alice and then finally into the old Air Force base that serves as Laredo's airport. This was the place my mom met my then to be dad.. It looked nothing like that now - lots of empty lots where the base buildings stood. My grandfather was still alive then, and we flew there to walk across and buy his meds for cheaper than here. Even with the cost of flying, we saved money when buying a 3 month supply. Customs always had a wink and nod attitude back then, as long as you weren't blatant. One Niner Fox took me on countless flights in and around the Houston area. It took my good friend Craig on the first of several flights with me. He used the pictures he took for planning purposes for the county disaster drill (he was a fire chief there in Liberty County). It was the platform I used for giving friends tours, showing them their homes from the air, and for fetching the ubiquitous "hundred dollar hamburger" (plane fuel was cheaper then... its now a $200 hamburger). Ted, the owner, put very little money into the plane other than what was needed for airworthiness. It was safe, but she wasn't a looker, and sure wasn't sexy. The engine ran well. The radios and nav equipment were once state of the art, and still were pretty substantial. It was dependable. It had never been hangared since I first saw the plane. At Clover.. er Pearland Regional, many upgrades have happened, but a few of the hangers were decades old, and half rotten. They served as little more than rain shelters. Why Ted put that plane in that rickety rat trap.. why he didn't tie it down somewhere.. or fly it out.. I will never know. I left the club years ago as my interests and finances changed.. The hangar is scattered across the taxiway.. its COMPLETELY gone to the slab. One Niner Fox's tail is twisted.. her wings torsed and flexed, the nose gear twisted off. It looks like it was lifted up and dropped from above. It only takes 45-50 mph of wind over the wing to make it climb. 110 mph will make it climb like a homesick angel. But she will never fly again. Given that water got inside of her.. very little is salvageable. Maybe the tires and ashtrays.. Little more. Its a sad end to a plane that never got dressed up pretty... never was the darling of the fleet. Goodbye little workhorse.. thank you for the memories.. |
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"Dave S" wrote in message ... I got an email yesterday from one of my flying friends.. the Bay Area Aero Club's Cessna 172 was destroyed as a result of Hurricane Ike at its home base of Pearland Regional Airport, formerly named Clover Field. When I returned to flying in 2000, I joined the Aero Club.. it was then based at Houston Gulf Airport in League City, now the site of Tuscan Lakes.. One Niner Fox (short for its full call sign/tail number N1219F) was the workhorse plane in the club rental fleet. It was easy to fly, and for most was the step up aircraft for newly minted pilots. Its interior was worn, original 1980's interior, but it was on its 4th engine then.. Every 2200 engine hours (the equivalent of 100,000 car miles or so), the old engine would come out and either be overhauled to new limits or replaced outright.. It flew solid, and was forgiving for new pilots.. One Niner Fox was the plane I first flew my then wife as a newly minted private pilot to Carls Barbecue in Cy Fair (behind the restaurant is Weiser Airpark).. I'd been there once before as a student.. but I was high and fast, and had to abort the landing and come back around.. My wife wasn't new to flying - her brother was my first instructor, but I think she sensed I was uncomfortable and she put her hand on my shoulder.. She never admitted if she was the least bit scared.. One Niner Fox carried me and my Mother to Laredo on my first long-long cross country and my first time to fly my mother. We went over Bay City, The nuclear plant (wasn't a big deal then), Corpus, Alice and then finally into the old Air Force base that serves as Laredo's airport. This was the place my mom met my then to be dad.. It looked nothing like that now - lots of empty lots where the base buildings stood. My grandfather was still alive then, and we flew there to walk across and buy his meds for cheaper than here. Even with the cost of flying, we saved money when buying a 3 month supply. Customs always had a wink and nod attitude back then, as long as you weren't blatant. One Niner Fox took me on countless flights in and around the Houston area. It took my good friend Craig on the first of several flights with me. He used the pictures he took for planning purposes for the county disaster drill (he was a fire chief there in Liberty County). It was the platform I used for giving friends tours, showing them their homes from the air, and for fetching the ubiquitous "hundred dollar hamburger" (plane fuel was cheaper then... its now a $200 hamburger). Ted, the owner, put very little money into the plane other than what was needed for airworthiness. It was safe, but she wasn't a looker, and sure wasn't sexy. The engine ran well. The radios and nav equipment were once state of the art, and still were pretty substantial. It was dependable. It had never been hangared since I first saw the plane. At Clover.. er Pearland Regional, many upgrades have happened, but a few of the hangers were decades old, and half rotten. They served as little more than rain shelters. Why Ted put that plane in that rickety rat trap.. why he didn't tie it down somewhere.. or fly it out.. I will never know. I left the club years ago as my interests and finances changed.. The hangar is scattered across the taxiway.. its COMPLETELY gone to the slab. One Niner Fox's tail is twisted.. her wings torsed and flexed, the nose gear twisted off. It looks like it was lifted up and dropped from above. It only takes 45-50 mph of wind over the wing to make it climb. 110 mph will make it climb like a homesick angel. But she will never fly again. Given that water got inside of her.. very little is salvageable. Maybe the tires and ashtrays.. Little more. Its a sad end to a plane that never got dressed up pretty... never was the darling of the fleet. Goodbye little workhorse.. thank you for the memories.. |
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